Great News for Catawba County — 500 new jobs

Posted in News on March 5th, 2010 by Leslie Auton

Great news for Catawba County…Pierre Foods will expand their current facility in Claremont and add 500 new jobs over the next 3 years and spend about $16.8 Million on expanding the facility.  For more information please read the full story from the Catawba County EDC.

For those that are curious to the location of this facility…http://www.mapquest.com/mq/7-TTarwI03

However, if you have lived in Catawba County for the last 30 years, you may be more familiar with the location where Western Steer / Mom & Pops housed their corporate office, bakery and ham/smoke house in the 80’s and part of the 90’s. 

Posted via web from Hecht Development’s New Home Sales Posterous Blog

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NAHB: Cost-Effective Green a Trend to Watch, NAHB Says

Posted in News on January 21st, 2010 by Leslie Auton
January 21, 2010 - The key to the mainstreaming of green is to make sure that consumers understand the value of green upgrades – and exactly how cost-effective that sustainable construction can be in the long run, according to four green home building professionals who spoke at a press conference on Wednesday at the National Association of Home Builders’ International Builders’ Show.

Builders, remodelers and product manufacturers are beginning to green their processes and incorporate more energy-, water- and resource-efficient features. They are learning how to reduce waste on the job site to save enough money to pay for these upgrades – and help ensure that the builder makes a profit, said consultant Steve Bertasso, who helps builders achieve these measures.

Green building has truly reached the tipping point because it’s moving out of the custom home market into the realm of high-production homes, he added. “This year is going to be a big change in the production [building] environment,” Bertasso predicted. “Consumers are asking questions they didn’t ask two and a half years ago and contractors are making better decisions.”

The key to reducing the nation’s energy use is to green existing homes, said Philip Beere, who is remodeling distressed properties near Phoenix’s new rapid transit line. Adding insulation, improving the ventilation and air conditioning systems and replacing turf grass with landscaping more appropriate to the Southwest’s desert climate doesn’t cost much more than a traditional remodel, but “retrofitting these homes to be green is a good solution,” he said.

Connecticut home builder Jim Pepitone called himself a “late adopter,” but one who has finally seen the green light – and believes the rest of the industry can’t be far behind. Builders need to educate consumers on air sealing, the importance of right-sized heating systems and good insulation, and the advantages of rooms that can serve more than one purpose so the home can be smaller and less expensive. “We need to make sustainable attainable,” he said.

Related Meetings:  
2010 International Builders’ Show
1/19/2010 - 1/22/2010
Las Vegas Convention Center
Las Vegas, NV

Recommend This: Recommend This Be the first!

Posted via web from Hecht Development’s New Home Sales Posterous Blog

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CVS Pharmacy Coming to the Corner of Webbs Rd & Hwy 16 — Fall 2010

Posted in News on January 16th, 2010 by Leslie Auton

Clearing finally began on the corner of Webbs Rd and Hwy 16 earlier this week.  Argus Properties, the same developer of Byers Creek Shopping Center on Hwy 150 in Mooresville, has announced that they have completed the sale of a 2.3 acre outparcel to CVS Pharmacy at the corner of Webbs Rd and Hwy 16 in Denver NC.  CVS anticipates commencing construction of its store this spring, with the store opening planned for fall of 2010. 

There are three outparcels still available for lease or purchase from Argus Properties.  For more information on these properties you can contact Stanford Garnett at 704.376.9848 x229 or stan@argusproperties.net.

Eventually, they will develop retail shopping with Harris Teeter as the possible anchor grocery store.  

Site Plan for Webbs Rd Project.

Posted via web from Hecht Development’s New Home Sales Posterous Blog

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Family Dough Donuts

Posted in News on June 23rd, 2009 by Leslie Auton

Do you like DONUTS????  If so, you have to check out Family Dough Donuts on Hwy 16 in Denver.    They have some of the best cake donuts that I have eaten in a long time.  My favorite is the Lake Norman Sand — it has a honey glaze with cinnamon sugar — it will melt in your mouth. 

family-dough-donuts

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Hwy 150 — How it WAS!! How it IS!!! How it will be!!!

Posted in News on June 4th, 2009 by Leslie Auton

I grew up in a house right on Hwy 150, between the intersection of Hwy 16/150 and Mt Pleasant Road.  When I was about 10 to 15 years old , we could walk or ride our ATVs up and down Hwy 150 from my house to our furniture store, from our furniture store to Hwy 16 and then back down to The General Store at Mt Pleasant Rd.  I guess it was about a two mile stretch, there was rarely traffic on the road and I knew everyone that lived on both sides of the road.   We would walk or ride a little bit, stop at someones house for a drink, pick up another friend and keep going.  Parents didn’t worry that some crazy driver was going to hit us…maybe they should have been worried…but there just wasn’t that much traffic on the road and cars just didn’t seem to go as fast as they do today… 

Fast forward about 25 years and we see today that there is a constant stream of traffic.  Some people will sit in their driveways for 5 minutes waiting on a break in traffic so that they can turn out…and that is just to turn right…sometimes it is longer to turn left.    Many of the old family farms have turned in to shopping centers, office buildings, apartment complexes, and residential or commercial subdivisions.    Today, no one could imagine adults, much less children, walking or riding anything up and down Hwy 150…

Hwy 150 has now become a strategic corridor in the eyes of the state and is being added to the list of Highways in the state to widen…I would say it is about time.  When will they start???  Well, the planning has begun and three counties (Iredell, Catawba and Lincoln) and two muncipalities (Mooresville and Lincolnton) are working together to create a plan for the widening of the 22.6 mile stretch of Hwy 150.   The initial portion should begin in 2014 when the state can begin buying the rights of way for the road…and will be about a 5 mile stretch from Mooresville to just on the other side of the Catawba County line.   The counties are in the initial stages of this process and are trying to work as a team to create a plan that will hopefully speed up the funding for the widening process. 

If you are interested in learning more about this, check out this link:  http://www.charlotteobserver.com/breaking/story/507252.html

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Growing up in Denver, NC

Posted in Leslie's Personal Experiences on June 3rd, 2009 by Leslie Auton

Not many people currently living in Denver, NC can say that they remember the Phillips 66 on the corner of Hwy 16 & 150.  Nor can they remember the Dairy Center or Foxfire convenience store.  The house that I grew up in was right on Hwy 150 about 1.5 miles east of this intersection.   I can remember riding the lawn mower from my house all the way up the street to my grandparents’ house which was right beside of Howard Furniture store (which is still there today).   During the summer, I would mow several lawns along the way.  I would always stop and play basketball at the Bradley’s house and then a group of us would get together to play softball on the field behind the furniture store. 

Those that haven’t lived here for 30+ years would never know just what kind of memories the softball field behind Howard Furniture Store hold.  There was a team that practiced and played there that travelled all over the nation playing in the highest competition level there was in softball.  They had so many National Championships that I think we just stopped counting.  They played double headers against local teams every Tuesday and Thursday night on the field behind the furniture store and hundreds of people would come out to watch.  They would see homerun after homerun that left thousands of dents in the metal warehouses that held the furniture store inventory.   If you are driving along Hwy 150 and see Howard Furniture Store, you have to pull in and go around back just to see the field and look at all of the dents. 

 

My grandfather (the owner of the team) paid me 10 cents per homerun ball that I found and threw back in during each of the games during the week.  Needless to say, at 10 to 12 years old, I had a pretty good stream of money coming in during the summer.  I loved it and you could not pry me away from the field if they were practicing or playing.   When I was 13, I began helping sell souvenirs at the home games and when we travelled to tournaments.  We had bats, gloves, t-shirts, and hats and I was in charge of making sure that we had the inventory to take with us to the tournaments and I did all of the ordering.  I guess this was my first opportunity to see if I had any entreprenural skills at all.  I don’t even remember getting paid and I probably didn’t but I just loved being involved with the team.   I think this is the year that we made it big and were on PM Magazine — which was big time for the town of Denver which at the time had just hit 500 full time residents.   During the next few years I remember meeting some pretty famous people due to our ties with the softball team — I still have the autographed picture of me and Joe Theisman (quarterback for the Washington Redskins at the time). 

You may ask, what does this have to do with real estate?  Well, I have roots to the area and I have seen many businesses come and go over the last 36 years.  Sometimes sharing our personal experiences just may be what will interest someone enough to look a little further into the Lake Norman area. 

I am sure you will hear more about my personal experiences in the future.

Thanks for reading…

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